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This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. www.sundaygazettemail.com
www.sundaygazettemail.com/sect - [Cached]Published on: 4/19/2004 Last Visited: 4/19/2004
Dr. Clark was appointed Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine and Fellow in Chest Diseases and Infectious Diseases at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. During that tenure he was also Director of the Medical Staff at Cincinnati General Hospital and attending physician at Cincinnati Veterans Administration Hospital.
He went on to become the Medical Director of Huntington State Hospital and later was in private practice in Charleston until his retirement in 1994.
He was a Charter Member of the CAMC Medical Staff, a Fellow in the Royal Society of Health, and a member of the American Medical Association, the West Virginia State Medical Association, and the Kanawha Medical Society.
A devoted Christian with an acute interest in Christian theology and history, he was also a member of St. John's Episcopal Church in Charleston.
Throughout his varied career Dr. Clark published a number of research studies, including, "Studies in Experimental Meningitis in Rhesus Monkeys I", "Studies in Experimental Meningitis in Rhesus Monkeys II", "Studies in Experimental Meningitis III", "Antibiotics Annual 1955 1956", "Penicillin-sensitive Mutants Arising From Penicillin Resistant Staphylccoccus Aureus During the Course of Experimental Canine Endocarditis" (Presented Oct. 9, 1959, at the meeting of the American Climatological Association at Cooperstown, N.Y., to be published and Pulmonary Function Standards (Presented Feb. 19, 1957, at the Air Force Symposium on Physical Standards and Selection.) His intellectual accomplishments, however, extended well beyond the science of medicine. Among his many areas of scholarly interest were music-especially opera-and Renaissance art and history.
As a doctor his expertise in internal medicine was coupled with a broad understanding of humanity and a genuine concern for people. His breadth of knowledge was matched only by humility, and he will be remembered especially for his compassion and gentle demeanor. -
2. The Charleston Gazette - Obituaries
www.wvgazette.com/section/Obit - [Cached]Published on: 4/18/2004 Last Visited: 4/19/2004
Dr. Clark was appointed Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine and Fellow in Chest Diseases and Infectious Diseases at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. During that tenure he was also Director of the Medical Staff at Cincinnati General Hospital and attending physician at Cincinnati Veterans Administration Hospital.
He went on to become the Medical Director of Huntington State Hospital and later was in private practice in Charleston until his retirement in 1994.
He was a Charter Member of the CAMC Medical Staff, a Fellow in the Royal Society of Health, and a member of the American Medical Association, the West Virginia State Medical Association, and the Kanawha Medical Society.
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Throughout his varied career Dr. Clark published a number of research studies, including, "Studies in Experimental Meningitis in Rhesus Monkeys I", "Studies in Experimental Meningitis in Rhesus Monkeys II", "Studies in Experimental Meningitis III", "Antibiotics Annual 1955 1956", "Penicillin-sensitive Mutants Arising From Penicillin Resistant Staphylccoccus Aureus During the Course of Experimental Canine Endocarditis" (Presented Oct. 9, 1959, at the meeting of the American Climatological Association at Cooperstown, N.Y., to be published and Pulmonary Function Standards (Presented Feb. 19, 1957, at the Air Force Symposium on Physical Standards and Selection.) His intellectual accomplishments, however, extended well beyond the science of medicine. Among his many areas of scholarly interest were music-especially opera-and Renaissance art and history.
As a doctor his expertise in internal medicine was coupled with a broad understanding of humanity and a genuine concern for people. His breadth of knowledge was matched only by humility, and he will be remembered especially for his compassion and gentle demeanor.

